Am 04.12.2010 um 10:07 schrieb Siep Kroonenberg:
>> The file starts with the hex c5d0d3c6 (or ≈–”Δ as string).
>> Then
>> comes a SPACE (or 20) followed by three ASCII NUL. So the number is
>> 20,000 hex or 131,072 dec. This leads into the middle of some
>> PostScript code. Then follows 7B50 hex (^G^K^E^@) or 31,568 dec. The
>> "scrappy" last 327,759 bytes then are a TIFF image of the EPS
>> image...
>> Byte order. Postscript start is 0x00000020, Postscript length is
> 0x00045ac7. The byte order of these numbers is always little-endian.
How do you come to this figure? When I read the byte sequence ^G^K^E^@
backwards I get 05B7...
>>>> And 5002.EPSF_Spec describes this header as "DOS EPS Binary File
>> Header" – why is it produced on a Mac in a Mac-Roman encoding?
>> Just try it. It works.
Already tried the last days, few utilities, both AI images, no
problems encountered! (Right now I let in the background GNU Emacs
edit the file to leave just the TIFF portion to see whether it's OK –
with the Mac line endings no UNIX command line tool works and the UNIX
line endings converted file is not OK...)
--
Greetings
Pete
If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament.
– Florynce Kennedy